Dobyns & Davis v. Rawley

76 Va. 537, 1882 Va. LEXIS 58
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 27, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 76 Va. 537 (Dobyns & Davis v. Rawley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dobyns & Davis v. Rawley, 76 Va. 537, 1882 Va. LEXIS 58 (Va. 1882).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The purchase money for the tract of land sold and conveyed by Fulton to Rawley and Davis jointly was $5,000, for the payment of which they executed their joint bonds. In the subsequent division of the land between the purchasers, Rawley's parcel was rated at $2,600 and Davis’ at $2,400, and in this proportion they were to discharge their joint indebtedness to Fulton.

The legal effect of the arrangement was, that as between the two purchasers and in relation to each other, .they were principal debtors for their respective portions of the pur[539]*539-chase money, and each was surety for the other’s portion. It results, that if either paid more than his agreed share, he became entitled to all the rights and remedies of a surety—to subrogation among the rest—against the other for repayment of such excess. This principle was applied to joint purchasers of land in Tompkins v. Mitchell, 2 Rand. 428, and was recognized in Horton and others v. Bond, 28 Gratt. 825, as the true ground for substitution to enforce contribution among co-sureties. It is there said that “ the sureties, however, are not only sureties of the principal debtor for the whole debt, but, as amongst themselves, they are each surety for the other to the extent of the excess of the whole debt beyond his proportionate part thereof.” See also 1 Parsons on Contracts, ch. 2, § 3.

It is understood to be admitted, if not, it is proved, that Rawley and Davis paid all the purchase money in equal portions to Fulton, except the last instalment of $1,500. As Rawley, under the arrangement with Davis, was bound to pay $200 more than Davis on the whole Fulton purchase, he was chargeable to Davis with this sum on the last instalment, which sum deducted would leave the residue to be paid equally between them—that is, he was bound to pay $850 and Davis $650. Two payments, one of $200 and the other of $250, were made on this instalment and credited thereon. It is admitted that Rawley paid the $200, and he claims that he also paid the $250. Davis disputes the payment of the latter sum, but we think the weight of the proof is that it was made by Rawley. When Derting subsequently acquired the bond for this instalment from Fulton, he at the same time acquired, as an incident of the debt and a security for its payment, the lien which had been reserved by Fulton on the whole tract of land sold to Rawley and Davis and afterwards divided between them. He had the right to stand in Fulton’s shoes, and at his instance equity would have enforced against the land ac[540]*540quired' by Davis in the division payment of his portion of' the balance due on the bond; and Derting had the right to insist that, before he could be required to make any further-payments to Eawley on the land purchased from him, Eawley should relieve the land of the lien; and Eawley had the equitable right to require, as against both Davis and Derting, that Davis should pay his portion of the-debt, and that the lien on his land should be enforced for that purpose. These plain equities among the parties made the amended bills of Eawley proper, if not necessary, and therefore they were jin no sense obnoxious to the objection made for multifariousness.

The court having all the parties in interest before it, by its decree credited the whole of the balance of the Fulton debt on the purchase money due from Derting to Eawley,. the effect of which was a payment of the whole by Eawley,. and then charged in favor of Eawley against Davis what should have been paid by the latter, and ordered a sale of' his portion of the Fulton land for the payment of the sum so charged. The equities of the parties inter sese were thus worked out with convenience, and the costs of several suits prevented. Assuming (for the present) that Davis is not entitled to the set-off he claims, he certainly has no right to complain of the enforcement of the lien for the balance due from him on the Fulton purchase; but it is insisted on behalf of Dobyns, the purchaser from Davis, that the lien cannot be enforced as against him, because he is a bonafide purchaser for valuable consideration without notice of the lien. In our opinion, he is by no means such a purchaser. In the first place, it does not appear that he has paid the purchase-money. It seems, he was to pay ¡¡>3,000.. On this sum he was credited with $1,750, the amount of a. debt said to be due him from Davis, and for the residue ($1,300) Davis, in one of his depositions says, he still holds Dobyns’ notes.

[541]*541Now, if this be true, the balance owing by Dobyns on his purchase is sufficient to discharge the Fulton lien to ■which Rawley was substituted, and Dobyns is not injured. But suppose he had paid every dollar of the purchase money under his contract with Davis, and the recorded, title-bond which he holds be treated as equivalent to a conveyance of the land, still he is not protected, for he purchased with notice of the lien. In the deed of conveyance from Fulton to Rawley & Davis, a lien for the purchase money is expressly retained, and that deed was duly recorded some time before Dobyns made his purchase. He claims under one of the grantees in that deed and by operation of law is as clearly and conclusively affected with notice of the lien reserved as if he had had actual knowledge of it. It is further contended, however, that in making his purchase he was misled in several ways by Rawley, and that the latter is estopped by his conduct to set up the lien.

And, first, it is said that because in the deed from Rawley to Davis for the land which was assigned to the latter in the division the Fulton lien is not referred to as retained, Dobyns had the right to presume that the lien was satisfied. We do not perceive the force of this argument. The deed was in terms and in fact merely a deed of partition, or one •of two deeds of partition, of the land between the parties, and does not purport to be anything else. It expressly refers to the joint purchase from Fulton, and thus directly to the source of the joint title, which was evidenced by Fulton’s deed on record showing on its face the reservation of the lien. But it is further urged that at the time Dobyns purchased, Davis had in his possession the first two •of the Fulton bonds or notes—one for $1,800, and the other for $1,500—and that Davis assured him that he had paid off his portion of the purchase money, and his possession -of the bonds induced reliance on the truth of the assurance. [542]*542Of course, Eawley cannot be held responsible for the unauthorized statements of Davis, and as to the bonds after payment, Davis was as much entitled to the custody of them as Eawley, and no man of ordinary prudence could have been misled by such possession. It was the duty of Dobyns to make inquiry of Fulton and- Eawley. If he had done so, he might have been protected. His failure to-make the inquiry was his own negligence and folly, and he must .take the consequences.

But the learned counsel further contends that even if the amount decreed against Davis was correct and constituted a lien on the land sold by him to Dobyns, yet the-court erred in not allowing the setoffs claimed by Davis-in his answers.

First, as to the note for $600. That is a note of Eawley to Davis, guardian of Mary J. and Frances E.

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Bluebook (online)
76 Va. 537, 1882 Va. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dobyns-davis-v-rawley-va-1882.